Sentences with phrase «different human authors»

The Bible was written over a period of about 1,500 years by more than forty different human authors.

Not exact matches

written by 44 different authors ----- Written by HUMAN authors.
Whether they believe it was written by God / god or a human author (let alone translated from one language to another over many years and the interpretations of those words taught / passed down over many years with many different understandings which formed with even the best intentions by men and women who were products of their time and place?)
While dogs and most humans use different hemispheres of the brain to process meaning and intonation — instead of the same hemispheres, as was suggested — lead author Attila Andics says the more important finding still stands: Dogs» brains process different aspects of human speech in different hemispheres.
«It is just a range extension of a mosquito that has been shown to possibly be able to vector different human pathogens that we currently don't have [in British Columbia],» said Scott McMahon, one of the authors and national operations manager at Culex.
While dogs and most humans use different hemispheres of the brain to process meaning and intonation — instead of the same hemispheres, as was suggested — lead author...
While the brain hemispheres dogs use to process meaning and intonation don't match what's seen in most humans, as was originally suggested, lead author Attila Andics says the more important finding still stands: Dogs» brains process different aspects of human speech in different hemispheres.
«Ferritin, a protein - coated iron storage molecule, is normally found throughout the mouse and human body, but in our experiments, we modified it, placing the ferritin particles in different positions to see if we could improve our results,» says co-first author Sarah Stanley, a senior research associate in Friedman's lab.
«We leveraged the extreme traits in different species to uncover noncoding regions in the human genome that likely have important roles in shaping health and disease,» said Elliott Ferris, first author on the paper and a bioinformatician and computer programmer in Gregg's lab.
«We need to bring in different disciplines, from computer science, engineering, math and modeling to human behavior, sociology, economics and education,» said David Balenson, another of the lead authors and a senior computer scientist at SRI International.
«We were drawn to this collaboration because in spite of the different environments, cultures, histories, climates and identities of the two regions, we were asking the same kinds of questions about human capacities to address challenging climate conditions,» says lead author Margaret C. Nelson, President's Professor in Arizona State University's School of Human Evolution and Social Chhuman capacities to address challenging climate conditions,» says lead author Margaret C. Nelson, President's Professor in Arizona State University's School of Human Evolution and Social ChHuman Evolution and Social Change.
«The brain is incredibly complex, so it's reasonable to expect that introducing changes from a different evolutionary path might have negative consequences,» study lead author Corinne Simonti, a graduate student of human genetics at Vanderbilt University, said in a statement.»
«Humans also suffer from different types of inherited chondrodysplasia, and the ITGA10 gene could represent a good candidate gene for some of these disorders, which still have an unknown genetic cause,» tells Kaisa Kyöstilä, the first author of the paper.
«These findings upset the notion that only humans use different sides of their brains to distinguish different aspects of sound,» says the study's senior author, Stuart Washington, PhD, a neuroscientist at Georgetown.
The genetic causes of bipolar disorder are highly complex and likely involve many different genes, said Carrie Bearden, a senior author of the study and an associate professor of psychiatry and psychology at the UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior.
The authors, from 13 institutes on four continents, reasoned that if humans were suffering from malaria when they left the African continent, it should be evident in the genetic makeup of parasite populations in different parts of the world; the theory predicts that parasites farther away from Africa should be less diverse, just as is the case in humans.
«Our study demonstrates that dogs can distinguish angry and happy expressions in humans, they can tell that these two expressions have different meanings, and they can do this not only for people they know well, but even for faces they have never seen before,» says Ludwig Huber, senior author and head of the group at the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna's Messerli Research Institute.
«Our study reveals a spectrum of methods that nature uses to allow organisms to adapt to different environments,» said senior author Kerstin Lindblad - Toh, Scientific Director of Vertebrate Genome Biology at the Broad Institute: «These mechanisms are likely to be also at work in humans and other vertebrates, and by focusing on the remarkably diverse cichlid fishes, we were able to study this process on a broad scale for the first time.»
The authors studied a standard panel of 60 established human tumor cell lines representing nine different human cancers, as well as several specimens of human primary ovarian cancer.
The authors refer to their hypothesis as differential partitioning - environmental buffering, and suggest that partitioning cells into different fates according to prevailing conditions could be a strategy used by many other types of cell coalitions — whether microbial communities, humans, trees, or jellyfish.
To shed light on the difficult question of when human - caused warming began, the authors of the new study make use of a different type of temperature record.
«There's a lot of research on how different kinds of environmental disasters — such as forest fires, hurricanes, air pollution, or heat waves — impact human health, but the most widespread natural disaster is drought,» said lead author Jesse Berman, a postdoctoral fellow at the Yale FE&S, in a press release.
«Our study reveals a spectrum of methods that nature uses to allow organisms to adapt to different environments,» said co-senior author Kerstin Lindblad - Toh, Co-Director of SciLifeLab, scientific director of vertebrate genome biology at the Broad Institute and professor in comparative genomics at Uppsala University «These mechanisms are likely also at work in humans and other vertebrates, and by focusing on the remarkably diverse cichlid fishes, we were able to study this process on a broad scale for the first time.»
«The range of applications of these low cost and light weight artificial muscles is really wide and involves different fields such as robotics, prosthetics, orthotics, and human assistive devices,» says Caterina Lamuta, an author of the study.
«While existing theories on why there is so much variation in the ability of different human populations to construct viable states are usually formulated verbally, by contrast, the authors» work leads to sharply defined quantitative predictions, which can be tested empirically,» they added.
Now before I tell you the statistic, let's keep an important fact in mind... according to well renowned nutrition author Michael Pollan in his book, In Defense of Food, humankind has historically consumed approximately 80,000 different species of edible plants, animals, and fungi, and approximately 3,000 of those have been widespread foods of the human diet.
In a 2016 review published in The Journal of Nutrition, the author assessed 20 different trials on humans, and concluded that garlic supplements successfully lowered blood pressure and improved elevated cholesterol levels — both of which are risk factors for heart disease.
A person is a being, such as a human, that has certain capacities or attributes constituting personhood, which in turn is defined differently by different authors in different disciplines, and by different cultures in di..
http://www.rrf.org.uk/pdf/History%20of%20Govt%20initiatives%20J%20Chew.pdf Beginning Reading: Influence on Policy in the United States and England 1998 - 2010 Author: Beth Robins http://www.nrrf.org/dissertation-robins9-10.pdf Report of the National Reading Panel: Teaching Children to Read In 1997, Congress asked the Director of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) * at the National Institutes of Health, in consultation with the Secretary of Education, to convene a national panel to assess the effectiveness of different approaches used to teach children to read.
There are also do - it - yourself author mills that push out thousands of «books» a day without any human intervention, and those presses are in a different category, too.
We all carry our childhood with us throughout our life... some things are buried deeply... some things we take out to remember frequently... Paula was a survivor, a chameleon... she learned to create new personas that fit the changing circumstances of her life by watching her mother react to life... I thought the author did an excellent job of contrasting Paula and Julian in light of their very different childhood experiences... Paula was a closed up prickly cactus... a dessert survivor... all hard, sharp edges that protected the true inner core of her... Julian was an open succulent... soft, sensitive to his nurturing environment... accepting and giving... like plants and animals, human beings adapt to their environment and when are we most open to learning?
The author looked at many different areas of human endeavor, looking for commonalities for when leaps of progress were made.
The dog microbiome «has some of the same species [of bacteria] as the human's,» said lead author Luis Pedro Coelhos, «but different strains.»
And Bill McKibben, the author and activist who's been exploring humanity's two - way relationship with climate in parallel with me since the 1980s, has different ways of characterizing the climate challenge than I do, and has chosen a different path toward achieving a sustainable human relationship with the climate.
... In a recently published book titled Why Scientists Disagree About Global Warming, the technically qualified authors (scientists all) point to four reasons: a conflict among scientists in different disciplines; fundamental scientific uncertainties concerning how the global climate responds to the human presence; failure of the UN's IPCC to provide objective guidance to the complex science; and bias among researchers.»
Jim Lichatowich, author of Salmon Without Rivers: A History of the Pacific Salmon Crisis, says, «The ideas in Pathways to Resilience are important guides in moving towards a different and sustainable relationship between salmon and humans...» Copies may be ordered online at http://seagrant.oregonstate.edu/sgpubs/pathways-resilience
Tags for this Online Resume: major speaker in international confrences in Geneva, Mexico, Warsaw, Amsterdam, Doha, Turkey, Australia, with published papers;, Human Rights expert hvaing framed a new right in 1983/4 in Mexico on Right to be Different., Prolific author of learned artciles, books and posted matter, Speaker & diplomatic envoy to the Prime Minister of Pakistan sseveral times in last 25 years, ledaing counsl befoe USTR in Washington DC, Leading cousel in dozens of reported cases internationally
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